Eric Hooglund

Eric James Hooglund (born March 18, 1944) is an American political scientist and an expert on contemporary Iran.[1] Since 2010 he has been a Senior Research Professor at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Lund University in Sweden.[2][3]

Hooglund was born in Waterville, Maine, and was educated at the University of Maine at Orono, from where he revived a BA in history in 1966. He was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Iran (1966–68) and subsequently undertook graduate studies at Johns Hopkins University under the pre-eminent scholar of Islamic law, Majid Khadduri, receiving a Ph.D in international relations and Middle Eastern Studies in 1975. During his doctoral field research in Iran in the early 1970s, he worked with Hamid Enayat, Nader Afshar Naderi, Javad Safinejad and Mostafa Azkia. His dissertation on the politics of land reform became his first published book, Land and Revolution in Rural Iran, 1960-1980, and it shows the influence of the ideas of James Scott, Eric Wolf, and Barrington Moore, Jr. on his approach to the study of peasant societies and rural resistance movements.

Hooglund has a long-standing commitment to the development of Middle Eastern studies as an academic discipline. For more than a decade he was a member of the editorial collective of Middle East Report published by MERIP, later was editor of the Middle East Journal and since 1995 has been editor of Middle East Critique.[4] He also has worked for several Middle East-focused non-governmental organizations, including the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, the National Security Archive, and the Institute for Palestine Studies. His teaching experience includes Bates College and Bowdoin College in Maine, Ohio State University, the University of California, Berkeley, St. Antony’s College, Oxford, Shiraz University in Iran, and Middle East Technical University in Turkey.[5]

Hooglund has published several books and over 100 articles during his professional career. In his work Hooglund examines diverse aspects of Iranian culture, government, history, international relations, literature, migration, political economy, sociology, and religion. Although trained as a political scientist his best-known work falls in the category of rural political economy and sociology.[6]

List of Iran Publications

  • Navigating Contemporary Iran: Challenging Economic, Social & Political Perceptions (co-edited with Leif Stenberg, Routledge, 2012). ISBN 0415678668
  • Gender in Contemporary Iran" (co-edited with Roksana Bahramitash, Routledge, 2011)
  • "Iran, A Country Study" (co-edited with Glenn Curtis, GPO, 2009)
  • "Iran in Transition: Twenty Years of Social Change Since 1979 (Syracuse University Press,2002)
  • "Iranian Revolution and the Islamic Republic" (co-edited Nikki Keddie, Syracuse University Press, 1986)
  • "Land and Revolution in Iran, 1960-1980" (University of Texas Press, 1982)
gollark: My webserver seems to have decided to stop webserving and just has some cryptic error about goroutines and a stack trace. What joy.
gollark: The bug (at least in the form everyone was using) was affecting iOS.
gollark: It's not a kernel one, it's in their text rendering library.
gollark: In the "effective power" one, the problem was apparently some issue with processing text for display in shortened form in notifications where it accessed the wrong memory address, which made the entire process doing that exit, and apparently for some bizarre reason when the notification process exited it brought the entire OS down.
gollark: True, true, you'd expect them to have better sandboxing or something.

References

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